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Resolution and the detection of cultural dispersals: development and application of spatiotemporal methods in Lowland South America

Social Work

Resolution and the detection of cultural dispersals: development and application of spatiotemporal methods in Lowland South America

P. Riris and F. Silva

This research by Philip Riris and Fabio Silva dives into the intricate use of radiocarbon datasets to explore prehistoric dispersals in lowland South America. It uncovers the complexities of data quality and chronometric uncertainty and presents a novel analytical approach that enhances our understanding of cultural mobility in the region.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Inferring episodes of expansion, admixture, diffusion, and/or migration in prehistory is undergoing a resurgence in macro-scale archaeological interpretation. In parallel to this renewed popularity, access to computational tools among archaeologists has seen the use of aggregated radiocarbon datasets for the study of dispersals also increasing. This paper advocates for developing reflexive practice in the application of radiocarbon dates to pre-historic dispersals, by reflecting on the qualities of the underlying data, particularly chronometric uncertainty, and framing dispersals explicitly in terms of hypothesis testing. This paper draws on cultural expansions within South America and employs two emblematic examples, the Arauquinoid and Tupiguarani traditions, to develop an analytical solution that not only incorporates chronometric uncertainty in bivariate regression but, importantly, tests whether the datasets provide statistically significant evidence for a dispersal process. The analysis, which the paper provides the means to replicate, identifies fundamental issues with resolution and data quality that impede identification of pre-Columbian cultural dispersals through simple spatial gradients of radiocarbon data. The results suggest that reflexivity must be fed back into theoretical frameworks of prehistoric mobility for the study of dispersals, in turn informing the construction of more critical statistical null models, and alternative models of cultural expansion should be formally considered alongside demographic models.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Feb 03, 2021
Authors
Philip Riris, Fabio Silva
Tags
radiocarbon datasets
prehistoric dispersals
lowland South America
chronometric uncertainty
Arauquinoid tradition
Tupiguarani tradition
cultural expansion models
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